4.0 Article

IDENTIFICATION OF FUNGI INHABITING UNDERGROUND PLANT PARTS OF SOYBEAN [Glycine max (L.) Merrill] IN TWO DEVELOPMENTAL STAGES

Journal

Publisher

UNIV LIFE SCIENCES LUBLIN
DOI: 10.24326/asphc.2021.5.13

Keywords

soybean; soil-borne pathogens; fungal diseases; species identification; PCR

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Funding

  1. National Centre for Research and Development [BIOSTRATEG3/346390/4/NCBR/2017]

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Soybean plants are potential hosts for different pathogens, with soil-borne diseases caused by pathogenic fungi considered the main reason for global soybean yield loss. The research aimed to isolate fungi in underground parts of soybean in south-east Poland, with almost 80% of the 1692 fungal isolates obtained assigned to the Fusarium genus, particularly F. oxysporum as the most frequently detected species. Other soil-borne fungi accounted for approximately 19% of the isolates, with differences in prevalence of species compared to other regions of Poland.
Soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merrill] plants are potential hosts for different pathogens. Soil-borne diseases, caused by pathogenic fungi, are considered to be the main reason for the loss of soybean yields worldwide. The aim of the research was to isolate fungi inhabiting underground parts of soybean in order to identify potential pathogens present in south-east Poland. Research material comprised of seven soybean cultivars grown in field in 2017-2019. Samples collected in three subsequent vegetative seasons constituted soybean plants with disease symptoms on cotyledons, hypocotyls, roots and ungerminated seeds. Fragments of the infected plant tissues were subjected to mycological analysis. A total of 1692 pure fungal isolates were obtained from the sampled plants and almost 80% of these isolates were assigned to Fusarium genus. Among Fusarium spp. isolates, the most frequently detected species was F. oxysporum (71.3%). Other detected Fusarium species included mainly: F. graminearum, F. poae, F. culmorum, F. solani (syn. Neocosmospora solani), F. fujikuroi. F. avenaceum. Other fungi accounted for approx. 19% of the obtained isolates and their main representatives were: Alternaria alternata, Trichoderma sp., Rhizoctonia solani, Mucor sp., Cladosporium sp. and Rhizopus sp. Comparison of these results with published data from other regions of Poland shows differences in prevalence of different species of soil-borne fungi.

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